AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study links intestinal dysbiosis and bile acid (BA) imbalances with obesity, highlighting a significant decrease in the protein PPP1R3G in mice with high BMI and high-fat diets, suggesting a protective role for PPP1R3G against obesity.
  • - Overexpressing PPP1R3G in the liver of mice countered high-fat diet effects by reducing weight and fat mass, improving blood lipid levels, and normalizing liver health, thereby affecting systemic BA balance and increasing beneficial non-12α-hydroxylated BAs like lithocholic acid.
  • - The research further indicates that the anti-obesity effects of PPP1R3G depend on gut microbiota, involving changes in specific

Article Abstract

Intestinal dysbiosis and disrupted bile acid (BA) homeostasis are associated with obesity, but the precise mechanisms remain insufficiently explored. Hepatic protein phosphatase 1 regulatory subunit 3G (PPP1R3G) plays a pivotal role in regulating glycolipid metabolism; nevertheless, its obesity-combatting potency remains unclear. In this study, a substantial reduction was observed in serum PPP1R3G levels in high-body mass index (BMI) and high-fat diet (HFD)-exposed mice, establishing a positive correlation between PPP1R3G and non-12α-hydroxylated (non-12-OH) BA content. Additionally, hepatocyte-specific overexpression of (PPP1R3G HOE) mitigated HFD-induced obesity as evidenced by reduced weight, fat mass, and an improved serum lipid profile; hepatic steatosis alleviation was confirmed by normalized liver enzymes and histology. PPP1R3G HOE considerably impacted systemic BA homeostasis, which notably increased the non-12-OH BAs ratio, particularly lithocholic acid (LCA). 16S ribosomal DNA (16S rDNA) sequencing assay indicated that PPP1R3G HOE reversed HFD-induced gut dysbiosis by reducing the / ratio and population, and elevating the relative abundance of , which exhibited a positive correlation with serum LCA levels. A fecal microbiome transplantation test confirmed that the anti-obesity effect of hepatic PPP1R3G was gut microbiota-dependent. Mechanistically, PPP1R3G HOE markedly suppressed hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase (CYP7A1) and sterol-12α-hydroxylase (CYP8B1), and concurrently upregulated oxysterol 7-α hydroxylase and G protein-coupled BA receptor 5 (TGR5) expression under HFD conditions. Furthermore, LCA administration significantly mitigated the HFD-induced obesity phenotype and elevated non-12-OH BA levels. These findings emphasize the significance of hepatic PPP1R3G in ameliorating diet-induced adiposity and hepatic steatosis through the gut microbiota-BA axis, which may serve as potential therapeutic targets for obesity-related disorders.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11388703PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpha.2024.100976DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study links intestinal dysbiosis and bile acid (BA) imbalances with obesity, highlighting a significant decrease in the protein PPP1R3G in mice with high BMI and high-fat diets, suggesting a protective role for PPP1R3G against obesity.
  • - Overexpressing PPP1R3G in the liver of mice countered high-fat diet effects by reducing weight and fat mass, improving blood lipid levels, and normalizing liver health, thereby affecting systemic BA balance and increasing beneficial non-12α-hydroxylated BAs like lithocholic acid.
  • - The research further indicates that the anti-obesity effects of PPP1R3G depend on gut microbiota, involving changes in specific
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